Restaurants may see bad reviews due to bad weather

ANI23 Apr 2019, 21:03 GMT+10

Washington D.C. [USA] Apr 23 (ANI): If you think bad service and bad food are only reasons for poor customer reviews then you would be surprised to know that bad weather also contributes to bad reviews, claimed a study.

The study published in the Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Research found that customers left more negative remarks on comment cards on days when it was raining than on days when it was dry. Results showed the odds of patrons leaving very negative comments versus very positive comments were 2.9 times greater on rainy days.

In two other online studies done in other parts of the United States, results suggested that unpleasant weather left people in bad mood, which was then linked to them having less positive views about the restaurants they visited.

"Restaurant managers may see more than the usual bad reviews on certain days, and it may have nothing to do with the service or the quality of the food," said Milos Bujisic, co-author of the study.

"Restaurants can't control the weather, but it may affect how customers review them," Bujisic added.

While the weather was not the most important factor in how customers reviewed their dining experience, it can't be ignored, said study co-author Vanja Bogicevic.

"It may be a smaller factor, but it is something that managers should pay attention to," Bogicevic said.

In the first study, researchers examined the comments cards left at the Florida restaurants, all part of the same national fast-casual chain.

The researchers rated the comments on a five-point scale from 1 (very negative) to 5 (very positive). They also examined weather data from the National Climatic Data Center for each restaurant's location on the days' comment cards were left.

They examined 14 different weather variables, but only three were related to customer comments - rain, temperature, and barometric pressure.

Higher temperatures - which in Florida, can often mean it is uncomfortably hot - were linked to more negative comments.

The higher barometric pressure was also connected to negative comments in Florida, which is also probably different from much of the country, the researchers said, because rising pressure is often associated with fair weather. In warmer climates, high barometric pressure is often linked to higher daytime temperatures.

Two other studies conducted online offered more insight into exactly how the weather affected customer evaluations.

In one study, 158 people from around the country who visited a restaurant within the last 24 hours were asked to rate and describe the weather conditions right before their restaurant visit.

They also rated their own mood and what kind of "word-of-mouth" review they would give the restaurant - in other words, whether they would recommend the restaurant and tell others positive things about their experience.

Results showed that people who described the weather as more pleasant also rated their mood more positively. Better moods - and not the weather itself - were related to more positive word-of-mouth.

A third study specifically targeted people living in the Midwest, Northeast and Northwest regions of the United States, where the weather is variable over the year.

This study involved 107 people. Some were asked whether they visited a restaurant in the last seven days during pleasant weather, and some were asked if they had visited a restaurant in unpleasant conditions (very cold, raining or snowing).

Participants who reported eligible conditions for the study then answered questions about their mood that day, their dining experience and whether they would give good word-of-mouth to the restaurant.

Bujisic noted that bad weather may affect not only the mood of customers but also the wait staff and others who serve the customers.

"A rainy day may put employees in a bad mood and that will affect their service. Managers need to explain that to their employees and work to keep them motivated," he said.